RW: Enacting Comfort Measures Flashcards
Comfort
Sense of positivity and strength characterized by the relief of physical discomfort and integration of positive emotions
- multidimensional, dynamic and transient
Providing Comfort
Actions that are mobilized with the intent of easing/alleviating/transcending human suffering
Informed by principles of empathy, compassion and care
Factors that influence patient’s comfort
- Clinical environment (privacy, ambience, space for family, specific amenities, socio-political dynamics)
- Healthcare Staff (oppression/discrimination, language, self-reflexivity, competence, participation, safety)
- Family (presence and involvement)
- Patient (culturally connected, self-comforting strategies, spiritually connected)
Practices of Following (enacting comfort measures)
- providing are that is specific to the individual
- practice of listening to, respecting and acting on what we learn about who they are and what they need or want
- paying attention to voice tone, body language, facial expression and gaze
Comforting Nurse work
a. necessary touch
b. responsive touch
c. teaching and coaching
d. spiritual care
Touch
A powerful nonverbal form of communication that is essential for our survival
- helps us feel connected
- provide us with comfort and security
- make us feel valued, desired, seen
the challenge of touch
An uncertain activity, not a universal language with shared meanings
Interpretation can be shaped by age, gender, culture, spirituality, trauma, etc.
Considerations for Necessary Touch
a. Touch is never experienced as routine by the person receiving care
b. Explain what you are going to do before you do it
c. Offer, rather than impose touch and wait for patient’s response
d. If touch is going to inflict discomfort, tell your patient so they know what to expect
e. Avoidance of touch can be experienced as acts of isolation and stigmatization
Responsive Touch
Can be nurturing, comforting, healing
(i.e. skin-to-skin)
but can also be intrusive, distracting and assaultive
Considerations for Responsive Touch
Attentive to follow: when to touch where to touch how to touch how much to touch whether to touch at all
Patient Teaching and Coaching
Relationship between personalized provision of information and feelings of comfort
Taking what is foreign and fearful and making it familiar and less frightening
Reasons for teaching and coaching
- what to expect
- correct misinterpretations
- offer explanations
- promote self-efficacy
a. how to use new assistive device
b. how to engage in ADLs with differently abled body
c. how to manage side effects
d. what is considered medical emergency
e. alleviate anxiety
f. identify worsening symptoms
Considerations for Teaching
a. Timing
b. Cues indicating patient readiness
- emotional/psychological, avoidance vs engagement
- physical
- verbal
c. Cues indicating information overload
d. learning styles (different methods)
e. avoid use of jargon
f. reinforce with written materials
g. check-in/teach back
h. be open to the unexpected
Spirituality
Involves meaning-making through intrapersonal, interpersonal and transpersonal connection
“what brings one meaning?”
Goal of Spiritual Care
- decrease sense of meaninglessness, purposelessness, or hopelessness
- increase sense of relatedness, forgiveness or acceptance
*not about providing answers